# A Multidomain Lifestyle Intervention Is Associated With Improved Functional Trajectories and Favorable Changes in Epigenetic Aging Markers in Frail Older Adults: A Randomized Controlled Trial

**Authors:** Gloria Olaso‐Gonzalez, Fernando Millan‐Domingo, Luis Garcia‐Fernandez, Elisa Garcia‐Tercero, Monica Cebrian, Cristina Garcia‐Dominguez, Juan Antonio Carbonell, German Casabo‐Valles, Jose Luis Garcia‐Gimenez, Eva Tamayo‐Torres, Juan Gambini, Francisco Jose Tarazona‐Santabalbina, Jose Vina, Maria Carmen Gomez‐Cabrera

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/acel.70376 · 2026-02-12

## TL;DR

A 6-month lifestyle intervention improved physical function and slowed biological aging in frail older adults.

## Contribution

The study shows that a multidomain lifestyle intervention can slow epigenetic aging and improve functional outcomes in frail older adults.

## Key findings

- The intervention group showed significant reductions in frailty and improvements in grip strength, gait speed, and balance.
- The intervention was associated with reduced DNA methylation-based PhenoAge and preserved telomere length.
- The control group showed accelerated epigenetic aging as measured by DNAm PhenoAge.

## Abstract

Frailty emerges as the intermediate stage preceding disability, but there is a gap in molecular signatures for early detection of subclinical cellular changes, which could help predict frailty onset or the effectiveness of interventions. In this randomized, controlled study, we assessed phenotypical and functional changes in frail individuals before and after a 6‐month multidomain lifestyle intervention (nutritional supplement and supervised exercise) vs habitual care. We also analyzed whole‐blood methylome, including five epigenetic clocks, a DNA methylation‐based telomere length estimator, and the Rate of Epigenetic Aging (REA). Between October 2019 and July 2022, we recruited 47 frail, community‐dwelling individuals in Spain. Mean age was 80.2 years (SD 3.1) in the control group (CG; n = 19) and 80.5 years (4.3) in the intervention group (IG; n = 28). Compared with the CG, a significant reduction in frailty, assessed by the SHARE‐FI score, was observed in the IG (p < 0.0001). The IG also showed improved grip strength (p = 0.0053), gait speed (p = 0.0125), the Tinetti score (p = 0.0031), and Barthel Index (p = 0.0484). The intervention was also associated with statistically significant improvements in nutritional blood markers, indicators of biological aging, including reduced DNAm PhenoAge (p = 0.0253) and preserved telomere length (p = 0.0246). REA using DNAm PhenoAge indicated an acceleration of epigenetic aging in the CG (p = 0.0300). Other epigenetic clocks showed nonsignificant changes. Our findings suggest potential geroprotective effects of a multidomain intervention and indicate that DNAm PhenoAge and methylation‐based telomere length may serve as complementary markers for assessing health span‐related changes in frail older adults.

Trial Registration: This trial was retrospectively registered: NCT06975540

In frail older adults, a 6‐month lifestyle intervention slowed epigenetic aging and improved functional outcomes, suggesting lifestyle strategies may delay biological aging and disability progression.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Frailty (MESH:D000073496)

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12895478/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12895478